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Review
Being billed as the natural successor to Bill Hicks or Richard
Pryor can put a heavy burden of expectation on a man. Especially
as that man is a rather shambolic performer, ill at ease in his
environment.
Doug Stanhope spent the first week in his natural habitat:
the underground, raw and claustrophobic confines of the Tron
pub. Now he's gone from playing to several dozen people a night
to several hundred, in this brutally functional space. 'Ideal
for a world hunger symposium,' he accurately surmises, 'but not
for deranged tales.'
He's made an effort and put on a suit, which he doesn't wear
well. And as he shuffles to this utilitarian stage, beer in hand,
he resembles nothing more than a drunken uncle behaving boorishly
and inappropriately at a wedding in some soulless civic centre.
Stanhope has been a road comic for 16 years, and much of his
act comprises war tales from that rootless life. It's a hedonistic
and horrible catalogue of abuses, both narcotic and sexual
aimed squarely at those who want a vicarious life of drunken
abandon, hallucinogen-induced escapades and frequent, meaningless
and often depraved sex.
It's brutal, fratboy humour taken to its extreme. There's
no humanity in this just empty shock. Is this really the future
of comedy?
He's happy to twist any opinions to fit this nihilistic viewpoint.
Drugs, of course, are great. But not drugs like Prozac that deaden
the mind to the bleakness of tedious jobs and tedious lives,
only things like cocaine, because that's a completely different
oblivion, clearly.
Occasionally, these tales flare up into absolutely brilliant
lines, all the more amazing because Stanhope seems so unfocussed,
seeming to struggle for words and ideas. With his lifestyle,
the synapses probably aren't what they once were. But then he
claims to be funnier when he's drunk. And the venue is definitely
distracting him.
The harsh fact is that for first 45 minutes of the show, he's
nothing special. He's got a lot of attitude, can be sporadically
hilarious, and the cheap shock he employs can still be damn effective
but that doesn't place him among comedy's highest elite.
Then, in the last 10 minutes or so, he suddenly soars
a symphony of incisive, edgy, hilarious stand-up, performed with
the skill of a virtuouso. The shocks are to make a point, the
thinking depraved but inspired. This is what all the fuss was
about.
He bemoans those who blame everything in their shitty lives
on the most minor sexual abuse as a child, yet physical abuse
is considered a badge of honour. It's saying the unsayable, but
in order to challenge an accepted way of thinking, not just because
it's naughty to do so.
Similarly his answer to the anti-abortion campaigner flyering
with images of terminated foetuses is sick, excessive, callous
and absolutely laugh-out-loud hilarious because it so expertly
fights extremism with extremism.
If only the whole show has been as excoriatingly, viscerally
brilliant as this, every ounce of praise he's ever received would
have been vindicated tenfold. As it was, it only served as an
indication of how much he was treading water for the rest of
the hour.
Steve Bennett